Mike Eruzione

Player

Birthday October 25, 1954

Birth Sign Scorpio

Birthplace Winthrop, Massachusetts, U.S.

Age 69 years old

Nationality United States

Height 5′ 10″

Weight 180 lb (82 kg; 12 st 12 lb)

#26180 Most Popular

1954

Michael Anthony "Rizz, Rizzo" Eruzione (,, born October 25, 1954) is an American former ice hockey player.

Eruzione was born on October 25, 1954, to an Italian-American family in Winthrop, Massachusetts.

His father was a bartender and worked in a sewage plant, and he grew up with many of his relatives living in the same home.

He learned to play hockey for Youth Hockey of Winthrop as part of the GBYHL (Greater Boston Youth Hockey League).

1972

He graduated from Winthrop High School in 1972, where he was captain of the varsity hockey team during his senior year.

He then spent a year at Berwick Academy to fine-tune his hockey skills in a New England Prep environment.

After leaving Berwick, Eruzione attended Boston University.

He had initially opted for another school, but he switched to Boston after his coach forgot his name.

While at Boston, he averaged over twenty goals a season for four years.

BU coach Jack Parker called Eruzione "Pete Rose on skates".

1975

Eruzione also played for Team USA at the 1975 and 1976 Ice Hockey World Championship tournaments.

1978

He then spent two seasons with the Toledo Goaldiggers of the International Hockey League, being named the Rookie of the Year in 1978 and leading the team to the Turner Cup championship in that year.

1979

The book gives a detailed, inside account of U.S. Olympic hockey team's path to the gold medal, including the upset of the Soviet Union in the "Miracle On Ice" game, as well as a portrait of Eruzione's close-knit family and the experiences in college and minor league hockey that led him to try out for the Olympic team in 1979.

Eruzione has said he wanted to write the book so that his grandchildren would know there was more to his life than scoring one goal in Lake Placid.

1980

He is best known as the captain of the 1980 Winter Olympics United States national team that defeated the Soviet Union in the famous "Miracle on Ice" game, in which he scored the game-winning goal.

He is the author, with Neal E. Boudette, of the national bestseller, The Making of a Miracle: The Untold Story of the Captain of The Gold Medal-Winning 1980 U.S. Olympic Hockey Team, published by HarperCollins.

After his second year in Toledo, Eruzione, who played left wing, was named the Captain of the 1980 Olympic hockey team, scoring the winning goal against the Soviets and helping the Americans win the gold medal against Finland.

In an HBO documentary about the 1980 Olympic hockey team, Eruzione said of his winning goal against the Soviet team, "My friends always like to joke with me [about that goal], 'Three more inches to the left, you'd been painting bridges.'"

Due to Eruzione's having played under contract for the Goaldiggers prior to the 1980 Olympics, his amateur status was later brought under question by NHL Players' Association director Alan Eagleson.

Eruzione rebutted the charges, saying "He's trying to take something away from me that we so richly deserved. He can't take away the memory. Is he going to try to convince everybody in the United States we lost?"

Eruzione was one of five players on the US Olympic team not drafted by an NHL team.

Initially, he voiced his interest in playing professionally, mentioning the "New England Whalers" (by that time, renamed as the Hartford Whalers) as a possibility.

He retired from competition after the Olympics, despite contract offers from the New York Rangers, stating that he'd reached the pinnacle of achievement already.

His secret was that he was the captain of the 1980 U.S. Men's Olympic hockey team, but he failed to stump the panel, as his secret was guessed by Billy Bean.

1981

He was a technical consultant for the 1981 film Miracle on Ice, and said "we all know the movie will never be able to equal what happened."

Eruzione then became a television broadcaster, grabbing the microphone at Rangers and New Jersey Devils games and for the NHL on USA and NHL on Fox, and going on to comment at five Olympic Games, working for both ABC and CBS.

Eruzione said that he did not regret deciding not to play professional hockey, saying "after being a commentator and covering the NHL for a few years, I have no doubt I could play."

Eruzione returned to be the assistant coach for the hockey team for three seasons at his alma mater Boston University, where he currently works as Director of Special Outreach.

He is a member of several halls of fame.

He is a part-owner of the USHL Omaha Lancers, and a motivational speaker.

He also helps the Winthrop High School ice hockey team during the winter.

In the 1981 made-for-TV movie about the 1980 U.S. Hockey team called Miracle on Ice, Eruzione is portrayed by actor Andrew Stevens.

1999

Eruzione's winning goal against the Soviet Union has become one of the most played highlights in American sports, and was chosen by Sports Illustrated in 1999 as the greatest sports moment of the twentieth century.

2002

In 2002, Eruzione reunited with his 1980 Olympic teammates to light the Olympic cauldron for the 2002 Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City, Utah.

2007

On January 19, 2007, Eruzione appeared on the new version of the game show I've Got a Secret.

2008

In March, 2008, it was voted the greatest highlight of all time by ESPN viewers.

2012

In 2012, the Lawrence Larsen Hockey Rink in Eruzione's hometown of Winthrop, Massachusetts was renamed the Larsen Hockey Rink at the Mike Eruzione Center.

2020

On January 28, 2020, Eruzione's book, The Making of a Miracle, was released by Harper, in imprint of HarperCollins Publishers.

After its first week of sales, the book was No. 6 on the Wall Street Journal list of best-selling books, and No. 4 on the bestseller list of Publishers Weekly.

Like Eruzione, the book's co-author, Neal Boudette, is a graduate of Boston University.